Read Poetry by David P Carroll

You’re my best friend and forever my true lover
I know our true is true
Holding you forever inside
My beating heart
Thinking solely of you
My love

Your gentel kiss
Your warm smile
A feeling for true love
Living you my sweetheart
When you’re at my side
Oh I fall in love

A beauty from above
From inside and out
A true gift from above

A passion of love
So deep inside my heart
I’m happy I’ve truly found you
The one who was truly
Touched my beating heart.

David P Carroll.

Read Poem: What I’ve Seen… by Ismail Satia

I’ve seen hearts as hard as stones,

I’ve seen strong men who could crush bones,

I’ve seen families torn apart by the raining of drones,

I’ve seen houses drop with a touch of a cyclone,

I’ve seen and learnt that the deadliest disease is being alone,

I’ve seen children, through no fault of their own, their lives are torn,

I’ve seen death doesn’t send a postcard or remind on a microphone,

I’ve seen that everyone goes back and answers to the One on the throne.

Ismail Satia, Blackburn, UK

Read Poem: Change by Brady Liechty

Grabbing on to the plane, you fly – clouds above and below/
  
Hours later it continues, as does your belief that this is the way /
 
You find a way into the plane /
 
The doors lock /
 
Now you are stuck, bloodying fingers as you scratch towards the outside /
 
There is only one way out /
 
The once-plane lights up the dreary head-space /
 
Flying on squirrel wings you glide down at a pace of a shooting star /
 
Having no way to stop the descent, the clouds break apart /
 
Tendrils of light illuminate the mountain-scape /
 
A path, a pattern /
 
It is your way /
 
Something is wrong /
 
How did you end up on your back and why is the sky so… clean? /
 
Turbulence from the plane rocks you to the realization /
 
You were dreaming /

Read Poem: Fleeting Time and Oak by Renee Bousquet

My woods, my gentle comforters stretch to no confines but blue and to the sun. They surrounding me in shaded blankets, but unholding in the unbridled sense of it.

It’s to my special spot I seated in fallen form meandering through the tall pasture waving sea-like, to the tree… my tree, I say in humbleness.

Its ancientness anchored no longer to dark soil, its soul decomposing from whence it came.

We sit together, I now above the bark. I rub wishing to gain wisdom of the why’s, where’s, and when.

Many shades of shadows filled with greens waltz around me in goodly nature. The squirrel barks in dissatisfaction as he thinks he’s ruler in the upper canopy.

Right here, right now, the Promised Land has been given me it leased me in my short time here.

The gentle giants creaking in the breeze bemoaning; it seems to me in conversation as I ignorant in this realm.

In contrasting, I can only listen as I know not the language of them. I unleash in the verbiage of the Oak, as I just a small man amongst these ancient ones.

So, I come to sit soaking in their knowledge of noble guardians. It’s by just listening, watching, and breathing in deeply life.

By darkness an event that’s transpired a million-million times, I rub the bark of my companions. I feel blessed to have been given the opportunity to have my vanishing lease on life.

It ever so short my life like the distance walked to my man-made home. It a hovelled place really truth be told, just a few ticks of the world clock then I will be in past tense.

It holds no majesty like the wooded forest. I slow down and live slowly always as it’s gone in a twinkling in the eyes of the beholder. So, I embrace the moments as most precious.

Read Poem: FREEDOM by Mustofa Munir

From within many forms of an artful ambience
A leaf of a tree I saw was liberated,
It rejoiced its freedom with the wind,
When I released a kite in the sky,
Its flight was exuberant to me too,
Its freedom relaxed me,
Snatching the leftovers, swallowing,
Squawking within the spectrum of freedom
Some seagulls hovered over the edge of the sea,
Inseparable is the freedom from life,
As it is engaging
In many events of the planet,
In many congregations of
The atrophied humankind!

Mustofa Munir
10/09/2018

Read Poem: Marlboro Man by Suzanne Crain Miller

You showed up with your siblings.

We’d never seen anything like you.

You who walked among us like Achilles

through camps of grimy, plundering soldiers.

Chiseled cheek bones strong and lean physique

as if ready to take on the world,

Or run as far from it as you could at a moment’s notice.

And you had this way about you.

This throwback to another era kind of cool,

a cross between James Dean and John Wayne.

I thought for sure you were on your way up

and I loved you instantly.

We all did, knowing full well that greatness like yours

is a once in a lifetime occurrence to behold.

Those times we spent together roaming our town,

rummaging through places that were usually locked

yet were somehow unlocked just for us,

talking for hours, with an ease only we had.

A bond others envied, mocked through clenched jaws.

How that one time you told me through tears

about that night you spent in Dorothea Dix Hospital

and how you knew then that the un-mad

have no way to treat the mad.

That there are only pills, mountains and mountains of pills.

And you were sure you’d have to spend your life pretending.

That we’d all have to pretend the best we could.

How we’d always keep track of each other.

Over years, over all the things that seemed insurmountable,

though I can’t for the life of me pin point what those were.

And only once we dared talk about what our love might be,

but we never kissed. No we never kissed.

And I went to Missouri to seek God, education,

all the right things I knew a good girl should.

You went to Florida to run from God, education,

all the things you knew would define a good boy,

but I never forgot, no matter how I tried

to lay you to rest in this head of mine oh, a million times at least.

And the last time we spoke I cried telling you

how I wished I’d have gotten in your car that day.

That day you came to give me the book of poems and

say your goodbyes.

And you replied there would definitely have been a seat for me,

and we laughed and I knew then we’d never speak again.

Because I was married and you were never to be married.

Our time, that had not seen the light of day, had also passed,

pulled like burning, fraying rope through indecisive fingers.

That I would only be left with these mythical memories of you,

the ones I push down every time I smell someone

smoking those Marlboro lights you loved to light,

then breathe in slowly as if even inhaling poison was an art itself.

The last night I dreamed about you I shot up in bed,

reached for my phone, looked you up online,

even though I knew what it would say. I knew what it would say…

To this day, when you visit my sleep, I do it all over again

just to re-read that trite ancestry.com obituary.

The one that doesn’t say anything of the miraculous god

who walked among us, laid claim to our overworked Southern soils,

or about how you died, but I know.

Anyone who knew you as well as I did, knows how it happened.

We’re all at fault. Each and every one accountable.

We all took part, killed you.

Though not by any singular act, mind you.

Yes, this whole damn world, murdered you slowly,

one negligent, mundane day at a time.

Read Poem: God the Verb by Stephen Denham

What the Lord God most holy saw,
in a clear moment, one cloudless morn,
was a revelation to even his boundless mind …

that to address the crime of His calumny
throughout the ages, as an indolent despot,

required but the simplest act …
less than even a twitch for a being
of His almighty stature, in fact;

for noun-hood was indeed a lonely plight
that allowed all creation to construe
that for all God’s omnipotence,
there was nothing of consequence
He could actually do …

and so, like Adam,
He would take a wife (as it were)
not so much worldly as word-ly,

by creating “God” the verb …

what better way to un-do the sleight
that one ‘does’ not … than partnering
the most active lady in grammar,
a doer without whom God the noun …

(the Word that began the beginning,
that was, and was with)

would remain a fop, a prevaricator …

now his subjects, like God himself,
could do more than goad, gain or get …
they could “God” or be “Godded”,

as in:

“To make or be made pure or purified,
holy or cleansed, redeemed or sacred”.

Yes, a good day dawned,
one of God’s doing …

until word of a new verb in town
reached Lucifer, who’d been around
it has to be said …every bit as long
as God the noun;

thus, in the name of evil,
and ecological semantics,
fresh use was made of “un”the prefix
giving “un-do-godders” their mandate:

“To make impure, unclean or corrupt,
to debauch, defile or desecrate.”

Mercifully therefore, what the Almighty saw,
one other fresh moment, one blue-sky morn …
yet another revelation to His boundless mind

was that whatever He did, could be undone …
in a kingdom of free will, every verb had its antonym,
just as for good to exist … there had to be sin.

And so the good Lord finally realised
something that had taken eons to take in …
that even with omniscience, He’d never
fully understood, that:

“He created man in his own image …
in the image of God he created him”

meant not:
that man was perfect,
or not made up of darkness and light,
of joy and shame, and pain and remorse …
or not His adversary.

For God dwelt in heaven,
and man upon earth,
where nouns were terrorised
by unrepentant verbs!

So once again, as any Creator should …

“God saw everything that he had made …
and behold, it was very good”.

Read Poem: TRANSFORMATIONAL HEMORRHAGE by Alison H Barron

arrival or need
no real
understanding
or speed
a transformation
just around the bend
the universe
teaching a lesson
a now comfortable
new friend
time
patience
and space
will allow
that individual
to win that
great race
to shine
and be ready to climb
everything will be
OK
no need to panic
life is not
the Titanic
and calmness
will set the stage
allowing the reader
to turn an important
page
and become
the hero
of their own
masterpiece
train hard
get strong
know on this earth
you truly do
belong
confident
and true
must start believing
in you
Carly
or Bruce
stop
the bickering
make a truce
for no more
will the critic
or angel
outweigh
pieces parts
will forever
save the day
one big whole
that makes us
who we are
close the eyes
follow that
faraway star
for first
you must breathe
to be able
to achieve
and thrive

Read Poem: DEADLY EMBRACE by Debby Jones

Snow crackling beneath my feet

like stepping on dry bones.

A slippery playground

Of cold, dead earth;

I feel so far from home.

The wind howls its eerie lament

It gnaws at my face;

a hungry fiend with hands

as cold as Death’s embrace.

Each step brings me farther and farther;

yet sets my teeth on edge.

My journey seems never ending;

as the frost bites at my flesh.

No spring, nor summer shall I meet again;

For the cold wind howls my name.

The beast rages forth.

There’s no turning back.

I fear my time hath came.

It wraps its hands

around my neck

and takes my breath away.